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Journal ArticleDOI

Semantic power measured through the interference of words with color-naming.

George Stuart Klein
- 01 Dec 1964 - 
- Vol. 77, Iss: 4, pp 576-588
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TLDR
The sources of the word's power to interfere with color-naming and the events involved in the interference itself have not received much attention.
Abstract
Show the words 'red,' 'green,' 'yellow,' and 'blue,' printed in colored inks but in incongruent combinations of color and word, e.g. the word 'red' printed in the color yellow, the word 'yellow' in the color blue, and so on. The Ss are to name the colors (of the inks) as quickly as possible, ignoring the words. It is not easy to do. Invariably, the colors are harder to name than when they are shown in simple strips uncomplicated by words. The phenomenon was noticed by Jaensch, and was first reported in this country by Stroop.1 To say that the word interferes with the naming of the color is a fair reflection of the S's experience. Volume of voice goes up; reading falters; now and then the words break through abortively; and there are embarrassed giggles. These and other signs of strain and effort are common. The sources of the word's power to interfere with color-naming and the events involved in the interference itself have not received much attention,

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The effects of amount of information in the Stroop color word test

TL;DR: In this paper, the processing time of the relevant (color) and irrelevant (word) stimulus dimensions in a Stroop color word test were each varied by manipulating the amount of information in the color and word sets from which the stimuli were obtained.
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Exploring memory for product names advertised with humour

TL;DR: This article explored the effects of humour in advertising on brand name memory and found that humour impaired memory for products but enhanced memory for advertisements, and that humour distracts consumers from consciously, but not unconsciously remembering the brand names.
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The role of selective attention in perceptual and affective priming.

TL;DR: Results indicate that selective attention to (rather than the mere processing of) letter string identity at study is important for subsequent repetition priming.
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Cognitive and Electrophysiological Correlates of the Bilingual Stroop Effect

TL;DR: The BWLS reflects brain activity over time with contributions from language and color conflict at different points, and an N450 effect was observed, indicating that color words from both languages created response conflict, contrary to a strict response set effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

The neural dynamics of stimulus and response conflict processing as a function of response complexity and task demands.

TL;DR: Across tasks and conditions, the onset of the motor-related lateralized readiness potential (LRP) was earlier for the two vs. four response sets, indicating that smaller response sets enabled faster motor-response preparation and highlighting how different conflict-related processes operate in parallel.
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